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4. Moving People, Transmitting Ideas
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Figures and Maps ix
- A Note on Measures, Romanization, and Translations xi
- Introduction 1
-
I. Competing Interests and Railroad Construction
- 1. Technology and Semicolonial Ventures 19
- 2. Managing Transitions in the Early Republic 53
-
II. Railroads in the Market and Social Space
- 3. Moving Goods in the Marketplace 91
- 4. Moving People, Transmitting Ideas 128
-
III. The Making and the Unmaking of the State
- 5. Professionalizing and Politicizing the Railroads 165
- 6. Crisis Management 193
-
IV. On Track to Socialism
- 7. Postwar Reorganization and Expansion 223
- 8. Permanent Revolution and Continuous Reform 254
- Conclusion: The Legacies of China’s Railroad System 290
- Appendix A: Jin-Pu Railroad organization chart, ca. 1929 301
- Appendix B: Revenue of major Chinese government railroad lines (thousand yuan per mile of line), 1915–1935 305
- Appendix C: Freight transported by major Chinese government railroad lines (yuan per ton), 1915–1935 309
- Appendix D: Number of passengers by ticket class, major Chinese government railroad lines, 1918–1935 313
- Appendix E: Average miles per passenger journey by ticket class, major Chinese government railroad lines, 1918–1935 317
- Appendix F: Freight designated for export (tons), shipped from Hankou to Guangzhou and onward to Hong Kong by train, October 18–December 31, 1937 321
- Abbreviations 323
- Glossary 325
- Notes 329
- Acknowledgments 385
- Index 389
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Figures and Maps ix
- A Note on Measures, Romanization, and Translations xi
- Introduction 1
-
I. Competing Interests and Railroad Construction
- 1. Technology and Semicolonial Ventures 19
- 2. Managing Transitions in the Early Republic 53
-
II. Railroads in the Market and Social Space
- 3. Moving Goods in the Marketplace 91
- 4. Moving People, Transmitting Ideas 128
-
III. The Making and the Unmaking of the State
- 5. Professionalizing and Politicizing the Railroads 165
- 6. Crisis Management 193
-
IV. On Track to Socialism
- 7. Postwar Reorganization and Expansion 223
- 8. Permanent Revolution and Continuous Reform 254
- Conclusion: The Legacies of China’s Railroad System 290
- Appendix A: Jin-Pu Railroad organization chart, ca. 1929 301
- Appendix B: Revenue of major Chinese government railroad lines (thousand yuan per mile of line), 1915–1935 305
- Appendix C: Freight transported by major Chinese government railroad lines (yuan per ton), 1915–1935 309
- Appendix D: Number of passengers by ticket class, major Chinese government railroad lines, 1918–1935 313
- Appendix E: Average miles per passenger journey by ticket class, major Chinese government railroad lines, 1918–1935 317
- Appendix F: Freight designated for export (tons), shipped from Hankou to Guangzhou and onward to Hong Kong by train, October 18–December 31, 1937 321
- Abbreviations 323
- Glossary 325
- Notes 329
- Acknowledgments 385
- Index 389